BSEE forms panel to investigate Shell leak

OE Staff
Monday, May 16, 2016

The US Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) is continuing its investigation of the oil release from Shell's Glider field on May 12. The Glider field, approximately 97mi south of Port Fourchon, Louisiana, includes subsea wells and the field’s production flows to the Brutus Platform.

BSEE Gulf of Mexico Regional Director Lars Herbst formally established an investigative panel May 16. The seven-member panel is comprised of BSEE engineers, inspectors, and investigators. The panel will conduct a thorough investigation of the incident in order to identify the causes and any contributing issues that led to the release. The panel will make recommendations in its final report on how to strengthen existing safety and environmental management systems, and identify any reforms to existing regulations that may be needed. The focus of these recommendations is to prevent a similar incident from occurring.

BSEE approved Shell’s plan for recovery of the damaged flowline segment. A BSEE inspector is onboard the recovery vessel to observe the recovery operations. All repair plans for the subsea flow lines and production systems will be submitted to BSEE for review.

Production remains shut-in from the two subsea fields that flow to the Brutus platform. BSEE will not approve production restart of these subsea fields until all safety concerns and applicable regulations have been met.

Read more

Source of Shell leak identified

Categories: Deepwater Subsea North America Gulf of Mexico Regulations Oil Spill

Related Stories

Chevron Enlists Subsea7 for Mediterranean Sea Job

Saipem’s Underwater Drone Carries Out Autonomous Survey at Njord Field

TGS Gets Another OBN Acquisition Job in North Sea

Current News

Transocean-Valaris Tie-Up to Create $17B Offshore Drilling Major with 73 Rigs

Chevron Enlists Subsea7 for Mediterranean Sea Job

Malaysia Oil and Gas Projects Advance with Petronas' PSC and Farm-Out Deals

Vantage Drilling’s Ultra-Deepwater Drillship Heads to India Under $260M Contract

Subscribe for OE Digital E‑News